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à French Bandon Phrase Sense Abandon Mettre Word

正面 2196.abandon
英 [ə'bænd(ə)n]美 [ə'bændən]

背面
释义:
n. 狂热;放任vt. 遗弃;放弃
例句:
1. The officers and crew prepared to abandon ship in an orderly fashion.全体船员秩序井然地准备弃船。

1. op- "against" + pon- + -ent.2. literally "set against, set opposite". => oppose, object to.
来自古法语短语 à bandon,由 à(at,to)+ bandon(权力,管辖权)组成,字面意思就是“使自己处于……的管辖之下”,常用来表示放弃自己的权利、独立性或应尽的义务。其中法语单词 bandon(权力)与英语单词 ban(禁令)有关,而 ban 原本指的是封建领主在自己的领地上拥有管辖权,可以发布公告,要求或禁止人们做什么。同源词:ban(禁令),banish(放逐),bandit(强盗、法外之徒),contraband(走私、禁运品),banns( 结婚预告)。
abandonabandon: [14] The Old French verb abandoner is the source of abandon. It was based on a bandon, meaning literally ‘under control or jurisdiction’, which was used in the phrase mettre a bandon ‘put someone under someone else’s control’ – hence ‘abandon them’. The word bandon came, in altered form, from Latin bannum ‘proclamation’, which is circuitously related to English banns ‘proclamation of marriage’ and is an ancestor of contraband.=> banns, contrabandabandon (v.)late 14c., "to give up, surrender (oneself or something), give over utterly; to yield (oneself) utterly (to religion, fornication, etc.)," from Old French abandoner (12c.), from adverbial phrase à bandon "at will, at discretion," from à "at, to" (see ad-) + bandon "power, jurisdiction," from Latin bannum, "proclamation," from a Frankish word related to ban (v.). Mettre sa forest à bandon was a feudal law phrase in the 13th cent. = mettre sa forêt à permission, i.e. to open it freely to any one for pasture or to cut wood in; hence the later sense of giving up one's rights for a time, letting go, leaving, abandoning. [Auguste Brachet, "An Etymological Dictionary of the French Language," transl. G.W. Kitchin, Oxford, 1878] Etymologically, the word carries a sense of "put someone under someone else's control." Meaning "to give up absolutely" is from late 14c. Related: Abandoned; abandoning.abandon (n.)"a letting loose, surrender to natural impulses," 1822, from a sense in French abandon (see abandon (v.). Borrowed earlier (c. 1400) from French in a sense "(someone's) control;" and compare Middle English adverbial phrase at abandon, i.e. "recklessly," attested from late 14c."

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